The Dame Edna Experience (TV Series 1987–1989) Poster

(1987–1989)

User Reviews

Review this title
5 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
9/10
Hilarious
blanche-24 February 2013
Barry Humphries is Dame Edna Everidge in "The Dame Edna Experience," a riotously funny talk show from England. At the beginning of each episode, Dame Edna, after an introduction that has her standing with the Queen, the Prime Minster and various others, stands at the top of a tall staircase, yells "Hello, Possums!" and reveals herself in an outrageous gown and walks down the stairs to music and thunderous applause. She then introduces her former bridesmaid when she married Norm, Madge (Emily Perry) who sits straight-faced through the entire show.

Dame Edna's guests are an eclectic bunch, everyone from Sir Cliff Richard, Grace Jones, Jerry Hall, Liza Minnelli, Lauren Bacall, Tom Jones, Tony Curtis, Charlton Heston (who went careening down aforementioned staircase in a wheelchair after a tennis accident -- all a bit, of course), and some British celebrities and politicians not known in this country. She left Jane Fonda out on her stoop and never did let her in.

The guests very often are reduced to laughing out loud, obviously not knowing what's going to come out of her mouth. In the second season, Dame Edna moved her show into her luxurious apartment, 34 floors up with an elevator that winds up trapping Tom Jones and injuring British actors David Suchet, Malcolm MacDowell, and several others in a very funny sequence. It was out of service when Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. came on the show, so he walked up the 34 flights with her groceries.

There's usually a musical number at the end of a show that goes way too quickly. I can only say, I wish I had Dame Edna's legs.

Very funny and great to see if you're feeling down.
6 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Oh Joy oh Rapture
zoelisbeth4 March 2007
This is Dame Edna just as she is in person -- a consummate entertainer! Please try to see her in person, you must do yourself a favor. DE was so very current, so this is a snapshot of certain age. The only reason for not giving it a 10, is because of my personal lack of knowledge of British references throughout the show.

Always surprises, always on target, always multiple steps ahead of the audience and guests.

Prior to this show, I only "heard" about Madge Alsop, so it was a delight to finally see her in the flesh.

I was so thrilled to see her DVD available, that I bought it without any information of what to expect.

That she managed to get some guests of great renown is simply a tribute to DE! Hold your gladdies high, and enjoy possums everywhere! ..Zoe

PS for those of you who are too caught up with who she is, please do yourself a favor and suspend belief for a while, let go and laugh!
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Great way to spend Sunday evenings
john_oneill414 July 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Extreely funny interview show hosted Australian megastar Dame Edna Everage aka Barry Humphries (who for years I thought really was a woman and not a man dressed in drag.) There was no point in being a guest on this show if you didn't have a sense of humour as Edna was quick to burst any pomposity with her ejector seats, staircases that turned into slides and printing's that ate people. There were other staples on the show such as her bridesmaid Madge, her obsession with gynaecologists, feeling songs coming on and the need to stick a badge on every guest in the show.

Another feature of the show was having people who wanted to be on the show but whom she wouldn't let be on it until the final episode of the series. It gives some indication of the popularity of Barry Humphries and/or Dame Edna in Australia when you see that one of these guests was Mel Gibson!!! How they got him to agree to appear week after week I'll never know.

A really funny way to spent Sunday evenings which is sadly missed.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
The funniest talk show ever
otis1678 February 2004
My local PBS station ran this series several years ago, and I still can't get this riotous program out of my mind. I usually watch the first few minutes of Letterman or Leno, but this is one talk show that I watch to the zany end.

All talk shows have some boring guests, but this will definitely not be tolerated on Dame Edna's show! At the touch of a button, Dame Edna removes any tiresome talker. He or she may fall through a trap door or be removed with an ejection seat. I hope Dave and Jay are listening!

The sets are lovely, except for the private elevator which has trapped several super stars. Dame Edna, as always, is beautifully dressed. My favorite gown is adorned with a large animated stuffed lizard which on command can stick out it's lovely forked tongue. Don't miss this wonderful experience!
15 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Brilliant, but in the end more scary than funny
m_a_singer10 December 2004
Warning: Spoilers
I first heard Barry Humphries as Dame Edna Everage on National Public Radio, where she had very professional interviewer Scot Simon laughing so hard he was actually pounding the table where he sat. I had several minutes like that myself during the first two of the six programs on this DVD, especially when Humphries as Dame Edna would go off on brilliantly timed comic asides that built up to explosive levels of outrageousness.

Then, I watched the live audience performance, the interview with Humphries, and then the "interview" between Dame Edna and Humphries where she took him to task for his horrible portrayal of his mother in his autobiography, broke down in tears, and then fired him as her manager. I started laughing less and less, and ended up squirming instead. By the end of it, I decided that while Humphries is a very individual talent with incredible timing and a real gift for physical and verbal comedy, there is some core of cruelty and loathing in his creation of Dame Edna that is hard to describe but very real.

After a while, "The Dame Edna Experience" is not like watching a performance, but more like watching a very lucid, audience-assisted psychosis. It's not funny; instead, it's deeply creepy. After two hours or so, I removed the DVD and decided that I never want to hear or see Dame Edna again.
1 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed